Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Ernst Heinrich Weber

 
Scientist: Ernst Heinrich Weber
 

German physiologist and psychologist (1795–1878)

Weber was the eldest of three brothers who all made important contributions to science. He was born at Wittenberg in Germany and became a professor at the University of Leipzig in 1818, a position he held until his death.

Weber is best known for his work on sensory response to weight, temperature, and pressure. In 1834 he conducted research on the lifting of weights. From his researches he discovered that the experience of differences in the intensity of sensations depends on percentage differences in the stimuli rather than absolute differences. This is known as the just-noticeable difference (j.n.d.), difference threshold, or limen. The work was published in Der Tastsinn und das Gemeingefühl (1851; The Sense of Touch and the Common Sensibility) and was given mathematical expression by Weber's student Gustav Theodor Fechner as the Weber–Fechner law.

Weber is regarded as a founder of experimental psychology and psychophysics. He also conducted important anatomical work.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Ernst Heinrich Weber
Weber, Ernst Heinrich (ĕrnst hīn'rĭkh vā'bər) , 1795–1878, German physiologist. He was a professor at the Univ. of Leipzig (1821–71) and is known for his work on touch and for the formulation of Weber's law—that the increase in stimulus necessary to produce an increase in sensation is not fixed but depends on the strength of the preceding stimulus. With his brother Eduard Friedrich Weber, 1806–71, he discovered the inhibitory power of the vagus nerve (1845). With another brother, W. E. Weber, he made studies of acoustics and wave motion.
 
World of the Mind: Ernst Heinrich Weber
Top
(1795–1878). German physiologist, born at Wittenberg; professor of anatomy and later of physiology at Leipzig. He is celebrated for developing methods of measuring the sensitivity of the skin which, together with the work of Gustav Fechner, resulted in the Weber–Fechner law (ΔI/I = constant), where I is the intensity of the sensation and the constant is known as Weber's constant. The constant is different for each sense (for intensity of light, sound, etc.) and tends to increase with ageing, as sensory discrimination becomes impaired. (See ageing: sensory and perceptual changes.) It represents the smallest stimulus intensity difference that can be distinguished, and is a constant proportion (generally about 3 per cent) of the stimulus. This logarithmic relation is basic to almost all sensory discrimination, so that larger differences are required for greater intensities. (For a detailed account of the psychophysics that is the basis of experimental psychology and is still rooted in the work of Weber and Fechner, see psychophysics; see also size–weight illusion.)

(Published 1987)

— Richard L. Gregory

    Bibliography
  • Ross, H. (1996). E. H. Weber on the Tactile Senses.


 
Wikipedia: Ernst Heinrich Weber
Top
Ernst Heinrich Weber
Ernst Heinrich Weber
Ernst Heinrich Weber
Born June 24, 1795
Wittenberg
Died January 26, 1878
Nationality German
Fields physician
Known for experimental psychology

Ernst Heinrich Weber (Wittenberg, June 24, 1795January 26, 1878) was a German physician who is considered a founder of experimental psychology.

Weber studied medicine at Wittenberg University. In 1818 he was appointed Associate Professor of comparative anatomy at Leipzig University, where he was made a Fellow Professor of anatomy and physiology in 1821.

Around 1860 Weber worked with Gustav Fechner on psychophysics, during which time he formulated Weber's Law.

In 1866 Weber retired as professor of physiology and also as professor of anatomy in 1871. Around this time he and his brother, Eduard Friedrich Weber, discovered the inhibitory power of the vagus nerve.

Works

Chief works:

  • Anatomia comparata nervi sympathici (1817)
  • De aure et auditu hominis et animalium (1820)
  • Tractatus de motu iridis (1821)
  • Wellenlehre (1825)

Joint works with his brothers Wilhelm Eduard Weber and Eduard Friedrich Weber:

  • Zusätze zur Lehre vom Bau und von der Verrichtung der Geschlechtsorgane (1846)
  • Die Lehre vom Tastsinn und Gemeingefühl (185l)
  • Annotationes anatomicae et physiologicae (1851)


References

See also


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Scientist. A Dictionary of Scientists. Copyright © Market House Books Ltd 1993, 1999, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
World of the Mind. The Oxford Companion to the Mind. Second Edition. Copyright © Oxford University Press, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ernst Heinrich Weber" Read more